With Mood Manipulator, Facebook users can swipe a set of of dials in order to filter (or un-filter, in the event that Facebook's study is ongoing) the content of their news feeds, based around the criteria of "Positive," "Emotional," "Aggressive," or "Open," status updates and posts. Need a healthy dose of optimism? Swipe your Positive and Open sliders to "more," and Emotional and Aggressive to "less." Want to get riled up before an internet comment war? Up your Emotional and Aggressive posts, and down with the Open and Positive stuff.Explains McCarthy, "[Mood Manipulator] is based on Facebook's research into massive-scale emotional contagion through social networks. The linguistic analysis is done with Linguistic Inquiry Word Count (LIWC), the same system used in the Facebook study." The artist asks, "Yes, we are all freaked about the ethics of the Facebook study. And then what? What implications does this finding have for what we might do with our technologies? What would you do with an interface to your emotions?" With the free Mood Manipulator browser extension, McCarthy aims to put the power to control your own emotions back into the hands of the people. Because why should only mega-corporations get to have all the fun?
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